Infinity Float Tank Experience

First-time float therapy can sound a bit unreal, but Infinity Float Tank makes it feel very practical. You’ll lie inside a private capsule with water warmed to body temperature, cut off from the outside world, and just let your nervous system downshift. I like that a host is on hand to help you get ready, so you’re not guessing what to do when you arrive.

What I really like is the attention to comfort and follow-through: towels and bathroom amenities are included, and you finish with a complimentary herbal tea in the relaxation area. One thing to consider: your first session can feel strange. Some people need a couple floats to stop fighting the sensory shift and start fully resting.

Infinity Float Tank in Auckland: What You’re Really Buying

Infinity Float Tank Experience - Infinity Float Tank in Auckland: What You’re Really Buying

This isn’t a massage. It’s a quiet hour where gravity feels lighter and your body has a chance to reset. Infinity Float Tank at the Infinity Float Centre in Botany Downs runs about 60 minutes, and you get your own private float space. The price is $61.44 per person, and the ticket includes taxes and fees, so there are no mystery add-ons built into the booking.

The value here is in what’s included versus what you do yourself. You bring almost nothing. Your ticket covers the basics: towels and bathroom amenities, plus herbal tea after your float. You also don’t have to coordinate hotel pickup or rides, since there’s no pickup included.

Quick Planning: Location, Duration, and When It Runs

Infinity Float Tank Experience - Quick Planning: Location, Duration, and When It Runs

The meeting point is Infinity Float Centre at 7/2 Bishop Browne Place, Botany Downs, Auckland 2013. There’s no hotel pickup or drop-off, so you’ll want to plan your own trip—good news is it’s near public transportation.

Float sessions run from morning to evening. The centre works with a schedule that moves every two hours, and they can accommodate two people at a time, since there are two pods and two float rooms.

About your booking: you’ll receive confirmation at the time of booking, and if your chosen time isn’t available, they’ll confirm by email or phone. Cancellation is free if you cancel at least 24 hours before the start time, and changes within 24 hours aren’t accepted.

You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Auckland.

Entering Infinity Float Centre: Check-In Without the Guesswork

Infinity Float Tank Experience - Entering Infinity Float Centre: Check-In Without the Guesswork

When you arrive, the biggest relief is that you’re not sent off on your own. A host is on hand to help you prepare for the float session, which matters because float therapy comes with a few small steps and mindset shifts.

You’ll also get everything you need for basic comfort. Even if you’ve never floated before, towels and bathroom amenities are included with your ticket. That’s a big practical win, since it removes the “did I pack the right stuff?” anxiety that can spoil an otherwise calm plan.

The One-Hour Float: How the Capsule Works and Why It Feels Different

Infinity Float Tank Experience - The One-Hour Float: How the Capsule Works and Why It Feels Different

You’ll do a private float inside a capsule with a large tub of water warmed to body temperature. The goal is simple: float in water that’s close to how your body already feels, so there’s less sensory input pulling your attention away.

The water temperature is designed to help you reach a deep relaxation state. If you’ve ever left a long day feeling mentally loud, this kind of near-weightlessness can quiet the volume. You’re sheltered from distractions outside—so instead of sightseeing noise, traffic, or crowd energy, you get stillness.

A practical note: your body is used to constant tiny signals—heat loss, sound, movement, and contact with the world around you. In the capsule, a lot of that changes fast. That’s why some first-timers feel restless at the start, even when everything is clean, comfortable, and safe.

Preparing Your Mind: The Sensory Shift Takes a Few Sessions

Infinity Float Tank Experience - Preparing Your Mind: The Sensory Shift Takes a Few Sessions

Here’s the honest part that makes this experience work long-term: your first float might not feel like magic right away. In fact, it can take about three visits for some people to get the most out of it, because your mind needs time to accept the sensory shift.

That doesn’t mean you’ll have a bad time. It just means you may spend the first session doing a bit of mental scanning: How long until I relax? What if I panic? Am I doing it right? The host helps with the procedure, but your brain still has to learn the new rules.

One helpful mindset: treat the first session like practice. Your job isn’t to force calm. Your job is to stop negotiating with the feeling of floating and let rest happen on its own timeline.

Inside the Pod: Comfort, Space, and the Chance to Sleep

Infinity Float Tank Experience - Inside the Pod: Comfort, Space, and the Chance to Sleep

A big part of comfort is the physical space. The pod is designed so it doesn’t feel overly closed in. One review described the pod as large enough to starfish and reach toward the sides without feeling trapped—so for many people, it feels more like a cosy retreat than a tiny box.

Many first-timers are surprised by how relaxed they can get. More than one person said they were able to fall asleep while floating, and each float can feel a little different even if you do everything the same way. That variety is worth noting: you’re not buying a performance. You’re giving your body a different set of signals and letting it respond.

Also, this is a private setup. Only your group participates, so you’re not doing “turn-taking” floating while strangers rotate through your environment.

The Staff Touch: Professional Help That Keeps You Calm

Infinity Float Tank Experience - The Staff Touch: Professional Help That Keeps You Calm

The host doesn’t just point you toward the capsule. The experience includes help to prepare for the session in an easy-to-follow way. That matters because float therapy has a few steps that work best when someone explains them clearly the first time.

The staff also seem to prioritize cleanliness and comfort. People described the centre as very clean and the team as super helpful. If you’re booking as a break from sightseeing stress, that trust factor matters. When the environment is tidy and the instructions are clear, you’re more likely to let go.

After Your Float: Herbal Tea and That Slow Come-Back

Infinity Float Tank Experience - After Your Float: Herbal Tea and That Slow Come-Back

The float isn’t the whole experience. After your session, you’ll head to the relaxation area for a complimentary herbal tea. It’s included, so you don’t need to hunt for a café to finish the ritual.

This portion is more important than it sounds. When you’ve been still for an hour, you want a gentle landing. Tea gives you a simple, low-effort activity—sit down, sip, and let your body re-adjust at its own speed.

If you notice extra add-ons during your visit, you might see options like an oxygen bar offered at the centre. Since it’s not part of the standard included list, treat it as something optional to consider, not something you must plan around.

Best Use of Float Therapy: When an Hour Beats Another Activity

Infinity Float Tank Experience - Best Use of Float Therapy: When an Hour Beats Another Activity

If your Auckland itinerary has a lot of walking, hills, museums, or just constant people-time, float therapy is a smart counterbalance. A float session is the kind of activity that can reset your body without asking you to “perform” your relaxation.

It’s also a good alternative if you’re tired of the standard wellness lineup. The centre positions float therapy as a substitute for massage, yoga, or other physical therapies. That doesn’t mean it replaces everything. It just gives you a different tool: stillness for your mind and reduced sensory input for your body.

Morning-to-evening scheduling helps too. If you’re the type who likes to book something early so you don’t lose the day, you can. If you’d rather float after you’ve explored, you can also.

Price and Value: Is $61.44 Worth It in Auckland?

At $61.44 per person, you’re paying for an hour-long private relaxation session plus included essentials. The ticket covers taxes and fees, and it includes towels and bathroom amenities, which saves money and packing.

You’re also getting the human support piece: a host is on hand to help you prepare. That reduces friction, especially if you’re doing float therapy for the first time. And you don’t have hotel pickup costs baked into the price, since transportation isn’t included.

Whether it’s worth it depends on your personality. If you love quiet activities and you can slow your pace for an hour, it’s a strong buy. If you hate enclosed experiences or you can’t handle a sensory reset, you might not get full value on the first visit.

Who Should Book Infinity Float Tank (and Who Might Wait)

This experience is marketed as suitable for most travellers. In real life, it tends to fit best if you:

  • want a break from sightseeing stress
  • like calm, low-stimulation activities
  • are curious about float therapy as an alternative to more active wellness options
  • want an easy, one-hour plan that doesn’t require extra gear

I’d think twice if you know you struggle with enclosed spaces or you’re very uncomfortable with the idea of sensory deprivation-style quiet. That said, the pod is described as roomy enough that it doesn’t feel tiny, which may help.

Also, if you’re expecting instant calm like a switch flipping, give yourself permission for a learning curve. The centre’s own pattern seems to be that repeat floats help people get the most from it.

Tips That Make Your First Float Easier

Here are the practical moves that helped people enjoy the experience more, and they’re worth using even if it’s your first time:

  • Go in with patience, not pressure. Your mind may need a couple sessions to stop scanning.
  • Plan to truly rest. This is not a “do your best meditation” challenge. It’s an hour to let your body do less.
  • Use the host help. Ask questions before you step into the capsule, so you’re not figuring things out mid-session.
  • Expect your first float to feel slightly different. That’s normal, and it fades for many people over time.
  • Take the tea after. That slow come-back is part of why you’ll feel good afterward.

If you can, book once and treat it like an experiment. If you love it, you’ll probably want to return. Many people at this centre seem to go often.

Should You Book Infinity Float Tank Experience?

I think this is a great Auckland add-on if you want a real break from the “always moving” rhythm of a trip. For $61.44, you’re getting a private, hour-long float with heated water at body temperature, plus towels and herbal tea. It’s not just a novelty; the format is built for rest.

Book it if you can benefit from quiet, you’re open to the sensory shift, and you want a wellness activity that doesn’t require stretching, strength, or effort. Consider skipping or postponing if enclosed spaces make you anxious, or if you need constant stimulation to feel comfortable.

If you book, go in expecting it to feel strange at first. Then give it a fair chance. For many people, the second or third float is where the full calm shows up.

FAQ

How long is the Infinity Float Tank session?

The float experience runs for about 1 hour.

Where is the meeting point?

You meet at Infinity Float Centre, 7/2 Bishop Browne Place, Botany Downs, Auckland 2013, New Zealand.

Is this a private experience?

Yes. It’s private for your group only.

What’s included with the ticket?

Your ticket includes bathroom amenities including a towel, and a complimentary herbal tea after your float. All taxes, fees, and handling charges are included too.

Do I need to bring towels or bathroom supplies?

No. Towels and other bathroom amenities are included with your ticket.

Is hotel pickup provided?

No. Hotel pickup and drop-off are not included, and transportation to and from attractions is not included.

What times are float sessions available?

Float sessions are available from morning to evening.

How many people can float at a time?

The centre can accommodate 2 people at a time, with 2 pods and 2 float rooms running every 2 hours.

What is the cancellation policy?

Free cancellation is available up to 24 hours before the experience’s start time for a full refund. If you cancel less than 24 hours before, the amount paid isn’t refunded.

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